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Huge undersea wall dating from 5000 BC found in France

bbc.com

27 points by neversaydie 19 days ago · 8 comments

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Suppafly 18 days ago

I don't understand these articles, they found 400' of wall and only have one picture in the article that shows like 3' of it.

felixhammerl 18 days ago

Reminds me of Doggerland: https://youtube.com/shorts/Afwxk4peYys

  • poulpy123 18 days ago

    The place was part of doggerland

    • manarth 18 days ago

      Good comment, thanks.

      Doggerland is often thought of as the North Sea section surrounding Doggerbank as it is today, but as you've highlighted, it actually extended much further and as far south as Britanny.

FloorEgg 18 days ago

~5500 years old is the youngest plausible age based on historical sea levels.

We assume anything older than that has to be hunter gatherers. Personally I'm skeptical and think this is more evidence that points at much more advanced and older civilizations than what archeology seems willing to entertain right now.

  • manarth 17 days ago

    We've known that humans have been harnessing natural fire (e.g. sticks/vegetation set alight by lightening) for over a million years.

    However, until last week, we thought that the earliest point of humans _deliberately creating_ fire – e.g. through flint and tinder – was 50,000 years ago.

    A new find has dated the first instance of deliberate fire to be 400,000 years ago (probably by early Neanderthals).

    So I agree - the archaeological evidence and our interpretation of history is spotty at best.

    https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/dec/10/man-made-fir...

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